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At Washington Post, Democracy Dies in Historical Revisionism With Whitewash of Failed Biden Presidency

Posted on Monday, January 6, 2025
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In The Washington Post’s self-righteous telling, “Democracy Dies in Darkness.” It says so every day, right there below the paper’s masthead.

But democracy also dies in historical revisionism, of the sort found Dec. 29 in the Post’s front-page lead story, directly below the masthead and across five columns, titled plaintively: “Joe Biden’s lonely battle to sell his vision of American democracy.”

Tyler Pager’s fourth installment in a four-part Post series dubbed “How Biden Leads” reads like a cross between a postmortem defense of Joe Biden’s failed (my adjective, not his) presidency and a sycophantic hagiography.

There are so many “what might have beens” in Pager’s 2,349-word magnum opus it’s hard to know where to begin in dissecting and dismantling all of the historical revisionism.

The article begins anecdotally with Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., who was instrumental in getting Biden nominated in 2020, recounting a meeting with the president early last year as Biden prepared to run for reelection. A lachrymose Clyburn lamented that Biden’s supposed campaigning on “substance” was no longer a good fit in an era—a scant four years later—where style now supposedly trumps (pun intended) substance.

(Just as an aside, it was as if Clyburn had conveniently memory-holed Barack Obama’s performative “hope and change” candidacies, which were nothing if not style over substance.)

“After Donald Trump’s ascent, Biden believed that he just needed to show Americans that traditional democracy still worked—by listening to experts, working with Republicans, passing popular policies—and voters would rally around him,” Pager wrote, claiming with scant evidence that Biden “had succeeded in Phase One of his plan.”

When you begin with such a dubious—if not demonstrably false—premise, however, much of what follows is likely to be wrong as well.

“[P]hase Two never happened,” Pager wrote. “The truth of Biden’s presidency is that he failed in what was, by his own account, his most important mission: making Trump’s presidency seem like an aberration.”

Biden and Pager might regard Trump’s presidency as “an aberration,” but an American electorate that gave Trump 11.2 million more votes in 2020 than in 2016 clearly didn’t see it that way. Moreover, voters doubled down in 2024, giving Trump nearly 3.2 million additional votes on top of that. (For the record: Just under 63 million in 2016; 74.2 million in 2020; and 77.3 million in 2024.)

Biden’s governing “through traditional processes and institutions,” Princeton University presidential historian Julian Zelizer is quoted as lamenting, “ … didn’t do anything to end the very intense polarization that exists in this country.”

To the contrary, the Biden administration’s unabashedly far-left policies—open borders allowing the country to be flooded with unvetted illegal immigrants and having taxpayers support them, trillions of dollars in deficit spending that spawned 45-year-high inflation and interest rates, and unswerving fealty to a pro-abortion, pro-transgender, and pro-DEI agenda—only served to exacerbate that polarization.

The only thing surprising about the “intense polarization” is that Zelizer (and by extension, Biden and Pager) were surprised by it.

In Zelizer’s case, however, it could be because of the clueless crowd that he runs with. “Some Biden allies point to a recent survey of historians that ranked Biden the 14th-best president in American history, while putting Trump last,” Pager notes. But those historians have about as much credibility as the “felonious 51” intelligence officials who knowingly lied at the height of the 2020 presidential election when they asserted that the infamous Hunter Biden laptop had all the “hallmarks of Russian disinformation.”

Those historians notwithstanding, after Biden’s four years in the White House, Jimmy Carter—who died at age 100 on the same day the Post article appeared in print—can rest in peace knowing that his presidency is no longer the worst of my lifetime.

Pager wrote that Biden argued, “that he did not get enough credit for his accomplishments, especially on the economy.” That raises the question: What part of the aforementioned 45-year-high inflation driving up food and fuel prices—to say nothing of soaring housing prices that have made homeownership increasingly unaffordable for more Americans—does the lame-duck president not understand?

In the same vein, Pager credited Biden with “avoid[ing] a recession that many economists considered inevitable,” when he surely knows that Biden avoided a recession, but in name only, because liberal economists brushed aside the long-standing definition of a recession as being two or more consecutive quarters of declining gross domestic product. That’s a whopper for which Pager’s Post “fact-checker” colleague Glenn Kessler, should award both of them three Pinocchios.

“Substantively, few analysts deny Biden’s accomplishments,” Pager further swoons, citing as one of those accomplishments “mobiliz[ing] the government to vaccinate Americans against COVID-19, bringing the country out of a devastating pandemic.”

He might want to get second opinions on that “substantive accomplishment,” however, from the thousands of service members Biden’s Pentagon drummed out of the military for refusing to take those largely experimental vaccines or from the millions of elementary and secondary school students whose educations were irreparably harmed by unduly long school closures pushed on Biden by left-wing teachers unions, or from the thousands of mom-and-pop enterprises driven out of business by unnecessary restrictions on their operations.

Pager also credits Biden as having “rebuilt the trans-Atlantic alliance,” with the implication being that Trump had shattered it. But the latter is true only if you think that insisting that NATO’s 30 European members “pay their fair share” (to use one of Biden’s and the Left’s pet phrases) for their own defense—or Ukraine’s—is unreasonable.

And any discussion of Biden’s foreign policies would be incomplete without mentioning the catastrophic August 2021 pullout from Afghanistan. But leaving tens of billions of dollars in military hardware behind for the Taliban gets no mention in Pager’s detailing of “how Biden leads.”

And the fallback explanation for the failure of Biden’s “lonely battle to sell his vision of American democracy” is the Democrats’ reflexive excuse whenever they lose an election: “We didn’t get our message out.”

“Previous articles in this series … showed that Biden, even at the peak of his power, struggled mightily to communicate his decisions and vision.”

Au contraire: The American people were all too well aware of Biden’s “decisions and vision” when they went to the polls on Nov. 5. Voters correctly surmised that they would continue unabated if Vice President Kamala Harris were to succeed Biden and cast their ballots accordingly.

Pager devotes four lengthy paragraphs to how Biden and “some Democrats” in hindsight have faulted his attorney general, Merrick Garland, for adopting what they considered a go-slow approach to prosecuting Trump.

“Had the Justice Department moved faster to prosecute Trump for allegedly seeking to overturn the 2020 election and mishandling classified documents,” those Democrats say, the former president might have faced a politically damaging trial before the election,” Pager wrote.

Could it be that Garland recognized that those trumped-up (again, pun intended) charges were a baseless, nakedly political “weaponization” of the justice system and that he wasn’t comfortable pursuing a corrupt gambit just to win an election for the Democrats?

Even with all that said, there was much more to take issue with in Pager’s historical revisionist hagiography of Biden and his soon-to-end shambolic presidency, but why further belabor the point?

Suffice it to say that Pager should offer to be the ghostwriter for Biden’s post-presidency memoir. But libraries would have to shelve it under “fiction.”

Peter Parisi is a writer and editor for The Daily Signal.

Reprinted with Permission from The Daily Signal – By Peter Parisi

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of AMAC or AMAC Action.

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PaulE
PaulE
15 days ago

No one with any intelligence cares what the left-wing media says or does anymore. The MSM is simply an echo chamber of Democrat propaganda for those mentally challenged enough to still view them as valid news outlets. You’re not going to get the truth about anything from the likes of the Washington Post, New York Times and countless other Democrat aligned media outlets.

Robert
Robert
13 days ago

The Democrats are too hard on themselves when they say they failed to get their message out. They indeed got their message out and it (as well as the Biden’s administration’s performance) was so atrocious they sank themselves in their sea of stupidity!

jdalabama
jdalabama
13 days ago

there is no question that biden will go down in history as one of the worst and most corrupt presidents

Glenn Lego
Glenn Lego
13 days ago

Washington Post Where Democracy Goes To Die. Do you think they will like the new slogan? Lol

Sean Rickman
Sean Rickman
13 days ago

It wasn’t a total failure for nonobamba’s third term.They created a real mess that all PATRIOTIC AMERICANS are going to have to pitch in and help PRESIDENT TRUMP bring the real AMERICA back.The next thing that we have to do is vote the leftists out,

Avoter
Avoter
12 days ago

Their integrity died a very long time ago, so expecting them to truthfully review Biden’s failed presidency is a lost cause.

Ted
Ted
13 days ago

How in the world do these propaganda outlets stay in business? I realize there are still a large number of people living in la-la land where the sky’s are pink but, really, enough to keep the communist outlets going.

P2burner
P2burner
12 days ago

…”by his own account, his most important mission: making Trump’s presidency seem like an aberration.”…
Shouldn’t a US President’s “most important mission” be to move the United States forward, to continue to put America and the American people first, to protect our borders and our security? Biden has surrounded himself with sycophants and liars to the peril of the citizens. It may take decades to repair all the damage done in a mere 4 years.

Les tarlton
Les tarlton
12 days ago

The mistake is people thinking we are a Democracy. We are a constitutional republic. To say we are a democracy is a kind to terrorism.

uncleferd
uncleferd
12 days ago

President Biden’s cognitive state while both a candidate and in the office of President, and, his recent performance in the capacity of “President”, should be further investigated and documented for national transparency and future reference.
The fact of Biden’s apparent cognitive issues having been concealed from the voting public by the Democrat Party is a significant national security issue that could have fallen under the category of insurrection… since, evidently, unelected, unidentified individuals, knowingly, “stood in” for him, and, also, made decisions and engaged in official communications on his behalf, while keeping his condition secret.
The questionable “mechanism” by which Biden became President, as witnessed by polling place security system video and other evidence of ballot tampering, should not be disregarded… though, a separate issue from his ability to function in office, as mentioned above.
These issues require careful investigation and followup, as they, quite clearly…
1) must be known and documented for public record and education.
2) must never recur.

CLIFFORD F GERACI
CLIFFORD F GERACI
11 days ago

The WaPo is a disgrace and failure. I will be VERY surprised if Bezos doesn’t sell it.

uncleferd
uncleferd
12 days ago

Joe Biden was, as President, what he was as congressman and senator… an impulsive, transparent liar with an inexplicably large ego and an obnoxious presence. Of course, as President, he was also exhibiting a robust case of senility along with his typical, self-laudatory messaging.
What he never seemed to grasp, is that he was Obama’s VP for a single reason – that Obama knew he would NEVER be upstaged or outclassed by Joe Biden.

johnh
johnh
12 days ago

This article is hard to read & is not important to AMAC board in my opinion.

genius ideas
genius ideas
14 days ago

you are out of your mind if you think trump will fix everything

genius ideas
genius ideas
14 days ago

biden was a mixed bag who made some mistakes but did good, taking one sided views is not smart at all

Trump being sworn in
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